Englishfor English speakers
separate
Adjective
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Being separate means that a piece of an object is not connected to or attached to the rest of the object.
This chair was broken into five separate pieces.
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If two objects, ideas, or people are separate from one another, they are not together.
I try to keep my personal life separate from work.
separate
Verb
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To separate something is to take it apart, divide it, or stop it from connecting.
I diced the onions and the carrots, separating them into two piles.
object
Noun
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An object is a thing that you can touch, but it is not alive.
We don't know what killed him, but it was a smooth, heavy object.
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The object of an action or plan is the goal or the reason for it.
The object of soccer is to kick the ball into the other team's net.
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In English grammar, the object of a sentence is a noun or noun phrase that usually comes after the verb. This noun is usually the thing that is receiving the action.
In the sentence, "Yoko ate the bread.", bread is the object.
object
Verb
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If you object to something, you don't agree with it.
Most people will object to being asked to work too much.
glued
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adjective
(= pasted)
affixed or as if affixed with glue or paste
he stayed glued to one spot
pieces of pasted paper
together
Preposition
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Near; close; in the same place; not far; in a family or group.
I put all the books about food together on one shelf.
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Putting parts of something into one thing. Organizing
He put together a meeting.
She put her computer back together herself.
together
Adjective
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having your thoughts straight. Not crazy.